Negotiating the Epistemologic Implications of Oenophilia

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Emozionante! Produttori del Barbaresco Pora 2004

Above: No mixed emotions for me when it comes to 2004 Produttori del Barbresco. This is the stuff dreams are made of…

Last week took me to Dallas where I attended the Vias Imports tasting at the Italian Club of Dallas. It was an emotional occasion for me: I still hadn’t tasted any of the 2004 Produttori del Barbaresco crus and I was entirely geeked to taste the Pora (the only cru presented). I’ve been drinking 2004 Produttori del Barbaresco classic Barbaresco (i.e., blended from different vineyards) and the wine — from a cool and climatically balanced vintage — is showing gorgeously now. It’s going through a beautiful, open period in its youth. (Tracie B and I opened a bottle the other evening for dinner but finished it the next night with her killer nachos as we watched the Golden Globes: the wine actually became more tannic the next night!)

In my experience, Pora is among the softer Produttori crus and can be more approachable in its youth. No mixed emotion for me about this wine: I was thrilled to taste it and it’s sure to be one of the greatest expressions of this wine in my wine-drinking life.

I was also excited for my first taste of the 2005 Produttori del Barbaresco classic Barbaresco. The wine from this warmer vintage is more concentrated and not quite as elegant as the 2004. It is already very approachable and leans toward fruit flavor more than its older sibling.

One surprise was a wine that Robin really likes, Tenuta San Leonardo (Gonzaga) 2004 San Leonardo. I’m never such a fan of Bordeaux-style wines from Italy but this was showing nicely. It was interesting to taste it side-by-side with the 2003: I think that the cool summer of 2004 made for some great wines in Italy.

In other news…

Don’t forget to come see me, Tracie B, and NNP at the Mercury Lounge in NYC on Monday February 9. I’ll be posting updated info for our France 2009 mini-tour next week: we got bumped up to a better show than we thought in Paris… details to follow…

Above: Pickled jalapeños at a wine tasting? Only in Texas!

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The 1980s Richard Simmons look didn’t really work so well for Mick, did it?

11 thoughts on “Emozionante! Produttori del Barbaresco Pora 2004”

“Mixed Emotions”! Great track. This was the final album appearance of bassist Bill Wyman, so far the only Stone I’ve ever met. (Incidentally he looked and behaved like a complete p***k.) I still dream of one day sitting down in a cosy lounge to discuss jazz and football with Charlie Watts…

I met him in Cambridge when I was a student. He was signing copies of his latest book, but refused to even mention the Stones, which I found a bit rich coming from a man who is official curator of Rolling Stones memorabilia and launched a chain of restaurants called Sticky Fingers. My friend Federico met him at a cricket match and got his autograph, so maybe I just caught him on an off-day…

One of my favorite memories of Piedmonte is when we visited PDB in 2006 during fermentation. Aldo Vacca lifted a manhole cover from the floor and there was the juice bubbling away in a cement fermenter right below our feet . Keeping it old school, Baby! Going back in September to lead a bike tour for a group of San Diegans. Can’t wait.

I met Bill Wyman in a pub in London in 1990. He seemed younger, happier, and more handsome than one would imagine, as if he’d led a comforting and easeful life. He was most gracious with us, and seemed to be a bit of a film buff in the nicest way. As my grandmother would say: go know.